The role of Spanish socialism and that African country in that terrible crime

The ultimate purpose of the 11-M attacks, what the PSOE hides and what Morocco knows

Esp 3·11·2024 · 7:02 0

Today marks 20 years since the largest terrorist attacks in the history of Spain, perpetrated in Madrid on March 11, 2004.

Ten questions about the 11M 2004 attacks in Spain that still remain unanswered
What did Morocco find in Pedro Sánchez's cell phone to humiliate him in this way?

The big holes in the official version of 11-M

Two decades later, the official version of the murders of 194 people in those attacks still has unanswered questions and scandalous irregularities, starting with the rush to destroy the trains, only four days after those crimes (remember that the train from the Angrois railway accident in 2013 was guarded by the Police for six months and was kept for years on the land of a company) and the desire to wash them, destroying almost all traces of the explosives.

Based on the known facts about 11-M, today it is difficult to be absolutely certain of who all those who were behind those attacks were. It is possible to assume who was not there. The same official version does not establish links of the convicted authors with either Al-Qaeda or ETA, but the false evidence that appeared (such as the famous Vallecas backpack) and the hoaxes spread by the media related to the PSOE (such as the false discovery of a suicide bomber), linked to the data from the signs that pointed to ETA in the eyes of the security forces seem to have a purpose that many Spaniards did not know how to see at the time: to generate two different stories that, properly polarized, would serve to provoke a social outbreak and a harsh political change.

A massacre to provoke political change in Spain

I note that I have said harsh political change, and not just a mere electoral overturn. As I already pointed out here five years ago, the events that occurred after these attacks point to something worse than a mere attempt to manipulate an election: an attempt to change the framework of coexistence created by the Constitution of 1978. This change is already taking place and in a way that many Spaniards were not able to imagine just a few years ago: with an assault on judicial independence and an attempt to break the rule of law from the government, with the support of separatism and the extreme left.

Let us remember that contacts between the PSOE and the terrorist group ETA began in 2002, two years before the 11 M. These contacts were also made through a succession of lies by the PSOE and the Zapatero government to hide this negotiation, its content and its consequences. To this day, the minutes of that negotiation that were in the hands of the government remain unpublished (neither the PSOE nor the Popular Party revealed them, for reasons that have never been explained).

The effects of those contacts between the PSOE and ETA are very visible today. Two decades later, the political heirs of ETA are allied with the socialists and have obtained more political power than ever, without having condemned any of ETA's crimes and helping the PSOE to gradually dismantle our constitutional framework. The 379 unsolved ETA murders are still pending a sentence. In 2022, the PSOE voted against the EU investigating those murders as crimes against humanity, making it possible for these crimes to expire and their authors to go unpunished.

What the PSOE hides and what Morocco knows about 11-M

The real authorship of the 11-M attacks remains a mystery, but the data we know about the explosives (I refer to the excellent thread published by David Díaz on January 11) they encourage us to think that it was a professional job, and not a botched job by fans like those who were convicted. After so many years in power and taking into account that 11-M benefited it politically and that it did everything possible to cover its loopholes, it can be concluded that the PSOE does know what really happened, and it is not the unique.

On June 2, 2021, one of the greatest Spanish experts on 11-M, el journalist Luis del Pino, noted in a Twitter thread:

Yesterday,Morocco issued several statements. And in one of them he slips a direct allusion to 11-M, stating that "the Moroccan services contributed decisively to the investigations" of the Madrid massacre. What is it referring to? Basically, MohaMed VI is reminding Sánchez of an indisputable fact: the official version of 11-M could not have been built without the PASSIVE and UNOFFICIAL collaboration of the Moroccan government (and if I put words in capital letters it is to emphasize them , obviously).

By PASSIVE and UNOFFICIAL I mean that the 11-M summary is full of data supposedly coming from Morocco, but without any official communication from the neighboring country appearing anywhere. It's almost as if someone from Morocco had said: "Okay, we helped you put up the farce and we are not going to deny the shit you are putting in the summary. But what we are not going to do, in no way case, it's officially screwing us".

Morocco's role in the official version and its ability to blackmail

In 2010, Luis del Pino published a review of the alleged data provided by Morocco to the trial summary of 11-M, pointing out about the official version that there is "no official communication from Morocco supporting said story.". Ten years later, in the aforementioned Twitter thread, Luis del Pino added: "if Morocco helped (passively and unofficially) to set up the farce of the official version of 11-M and can prove that it did so, < strong>his ability to blackmail the Spanish government would be notable."

What Luis del Pino points out would explain to a large extent Sánchez's assignments against Morocco, which would be due to something more than spying on his personal cellphone in 2021, and the humiliations to those that Mohamed VI is submitting to the Spanish socialist government, without it issuing any complaints. Thus, M 11 would be the origin of a process that has led Spain to an unprecedented institutional degradation (unless we go back to 1936 in the days before the Spanish Civil War) and a weak government subject to all kinds of blackmail, especially those of Morocco, those of Catalan separatism and those of ETA.

Many Spaniards still want to know who it was

It is terrible to think that the murder of 194 people could be part of someone's political agenda, and it is worth asking if among the architects of that possible agenda were (and still are) those who intended that the government of José María Aznar completely ruled out ETA's responsibility only 48 hours after the attacks, demanding to close that avenue of investigation early as if their lives depended on it. Now we know the reason, seeing his alliance with the heirs of ETA.

One day everything that some want to hide will come to light and we will end up knowing, with name and surname, who planned that massacre to provoke a political change in Spain. Meanwhile, and in light of the events that are occurring in Spain, what is increasingly clear is that M 11 was the founding event of the current attempt to dismantle our democracy. This explains why some, after using those attacks to provoke an electoral overturn, silenced the slogan that some raised in the hours following the attacks, a slogan that summarizes what many Spaniards still think about 11-M: "We want to know who it was".

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Photo: AFP.

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